The
film opens on the Rocky Mountains and Yellowstone National
Park as seen from space.

Mountain
men meet and discuss the wilderness, freeze-frame
to a black-and-white sequence of the parks history.

The return of spring,
breaking up of ice, flowing water from snow melt.
An elk calf stranded at a flooded river.

A grizzly
family as twin cubs are chased away. Antelope
fawns are threatened by a coyote, who is chased
away by antelope does.

Spring
birds return to Yellowstone. Birds feed on mosquitoes. Baby
badgers emerge from their den for the first time.
A moose calf gambols around its mother.

Sunrise of a new
day. An elk calf romps at dawn. A grizzly pursues an elk calf.

Visitors return
to Yellowstone. A huge bear jam, as people compete to see and
photograph a grizzly family.

A lone hiker explores
remote areas of the park, including Specimen Ridge, where 27
petrified forests lie one on top of the other.

Map
of Yellowstones road system. "Tom The Terrible Tourist",
with his family, attempts to see the entire park in one day.
Never getting out of his truck, Tom engages in a frenzy of
picture taking.

Morning Glory Pool. New
geysers erupt under a boardwalk. The many geysers
of the Upper Geyser Basin set to music.

Interiors and exteriors
of Old Faithful Inn. Lake Hotel, built in
1899.

Yellowstone
Lake, the largest high altitude lake in North America.

A four day photographic
class sponsored by The Yellowstone Institute canoes
across the lake to a campsite. They swim the cold lake, cook-out
and are instructed in the art of photographing the beauty which
surrounds them.

Twin black
bear cubs with their mother. Another new day as
we accompany a park ranger throughout a typical day. Trumpeter
swans chase out an intruder.

Children and adults
enjoy a stagecoach ride.

A dramatic summer
storm. The reel ends as a rainbow appears
and the clouds dissipate.

As the day dawns, a
breakfast cook-out is prepared, visitors arrive
in a chuck wagon for a hearty breakfast at Yancys Hole. A
boy is taught fly fishing by his father on the upper
Yellowstone River, bird and animal fishing are also observed.

The
magnificent Lower Falls and the Grand Canyon. The canyon from
the air. A bighorn sheep with a lamb on the
canyon walls. Birds of the canyon. A gorgeous sunset.

A park ranger leads
a hike into Pocket Basin for a close look at the thermal features
and bubbling mud pots.

Elk cows
play tag. Elk calves romp and play on a beautiful summer evening.

A class from The
Yellowstone Institute observe eagles. West
Thumb Thermal Basin is explored. Mammoth Hot Springs is
explained.

Park rangers in fire-fighting training
have the unfortunate experience of helping put out the Gardiner
School fire at the north park entrance.

Grizzly bears
with a coyote. Buffalo in August. A hike to
Osprey Falls, followed by an ice cream break at a Hamilton
Store.

License plates from
all over the United States set to music.

Sunrise, as a pine
squirrel harvests pine cone. Autumn returns to
the park.

A
park ranger leads a pack horse laden with winter supplies to
a back-country cabin.

I want to personally thank you for your spectacular show last night
here in Worthington, MN on "Yellowstone"! Already this
morning I have received several phone calls from patrons saying
that this was quite possibly the best show we have ever had here
in Worthington. The Worthington Noon Kiwanis Club has been doing
this for 40+ years, so that is quite a testimonial!
I know one thing, this show was one of the most enjoyable, interesting
and entertaining travelogues I have ever witnessed! The way you
synchronized the music to the motions of the wild animals in this
film was masterful! Several people (as they exited last night) told me that they would like to have you back to show your Grand
Canyon show in the near future.

Thanks again! As chairperson, I feel privileged to work with true
professionals like you and Sandy.

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